The Painter Jacques Louis David ... His paintings with the French society.



Jacques Louis David.....mimic French society

the painter Jacques Louis

David Jacques-Louis (August 30, 1748-December 29, 1825)
French is a painter and one of the most prominent artists of the Classical School of Fine Arts at the time.
He was born to a Parisian middle-class family in 1748. After the assassination of his father, he lived with his uncles. At the age of 16 he studied art at the Royal Academy. In 1774 he received the Rome Prize. He then travelled to Italy, where he was influenced by classical art and the work of seventeenth-century artist Nicolas Busan. He stayed there for six years. David created his neoclassical style. He was considered the leading photographer of this stage.
His mind-boggling paintings of (historical) storytelling in the 1880s added a change of taste away from Rococo's absurdity towards the rigour, rigidity and growing sense of classicism, in line with the moral climate of the last years of the old order.
David later became an active supporter of the French Revolution and a friend of Maximilian Robespierre (1758-1794), and was practically the absolute ruler of the arts under the French Republic.
Imprisoned after the fall of Robespierre, he joined another political system upon his release: he became a follower of Napoleon, the first consul of France. Its imperial style grew at this time, characterized by the use of warm colors of Venice. After Napoleon's imperial power diminished and the Bourbons recovered, David exiled himself to Brussels, then to the Dutch United Kingdom, where he remained until his death.
David has a large number of students, making it the strongest influence on French art in the early 19th century, especially academic photography in the salon.
David was a relative of the artist François Bouchet, who helped him in his early days as a student. One of his most famous works is "The Combat Section" (1784), "Death of Mara"https://www.blogger.com/u/2/blog/post/edit/1170045952807426101/6750671715308681502?hl=fr (1793) by Jacques, a famous story in history that is one of the most famous assassination choices in the French Revolution, "The Women of Sabine". (1799) Napoleon passes through the Alps (1801-1805).
He died in 1825 in Brussels, and among his followers is the Belgian artist François Joseph Neves.
When we talk about the ancient history of France, we will find ourselves confronted with the most brutal assassinations, and the events and consequences of the French Revolution will itself be the real terror to which the French themselves were exposed at that time.

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